Americans for Prosperity - research and background information

Americans for Prosperity (AFP)

Background

Americans for Prosperity[1] (AFP) is a conservative think-tank established in Washington, D.C. in 2003. It replaced the Citizens for a Sound Economy Foundation.[2]AFP is the sister organization to FreedomWorks. FreedomWorks[3] is an organization that formed in 2004 when Citizens for a Sound Economy merged with the think tank Empower America. Both the Citizens for a Sound Economy and Citizens for a Sound Economy Foundation were created by the Koch Foundations.

The organization is extremely conservative in its economic and governance beliefs. Its mission is to reduce taxes and government spending, promote entrepeunership, and restore fairness to the American judicial system.

Funding

AFP is a non-profit organization which chooses not to disclose its donors. However, Media Transparency shows from 2003-2006, Americans for Prosperity received $1,181,000[6] from conservative foundations. $1 million of that funding was given by the Claude R. Lambe Charitable Foundation–one of the Koch Family Foundations.

The AFP is the third largest recipient of funding from the Koch Family Foundations, behind the Cato Institute and the George Mason University Foundation.

Before 2003, when the AFP was still named the Citizens for a Sound Economy Foundation, it received $18,460,912 in funding. 84% of that funding came from the Koch Family Foundations[7] ($12,906,712) and the Scaife Family Foundations ($2,510,000). Koch Family Foundations is funded by Koch Industries. According to Forbes, Koch Industries is the second largest privately-held company[8], and the largest privately owned energy company, in the United States. Koch industries has made its money in the oil business, primarily oil refining. Presently, it holds stakes in pipelines, refineries, fertilizer, forest products, and chemical technology.

Americans for Prosperity is also connected to oil giant ExxonMobil. According to ExxonSecrets, between the years 1998-2001, Citizens for A Sound Economy and Citizens for a Sound Economy Foundation received $380,250 from ExxonMobil[9].

Hot Air Balloons and Climate Change

In 2008, AFP embarked on a nation wide campaign against global warming. The campaign was called the “Hot Air Tour.” During the Hot Air Tour, AFP traveled in a hot air balloon to forty cities in the United States and held events in those cities.

During the Hot Air Tour[10], AFP president, Tim Phillips, said Americans for Prosperity became active in the issue of global warming in order to prevent cap-and-trade, and other climate change legislation from being passed in government. He declared if any cap and trade legislation were passed it would create a massive tax burden on American citizens, kill the economy, and harmfully infringe on personal freedoms.

In a public address Tim Phillips stated there would be a $1.2 Trillion tax increase if a cap-and-trade bill was passed, which would be felt predominantly by average Americans. In his public address, Phillips said 1.2-1.8 million jobs would be lost with cap-and-trade legislation. The source he cited for this information was the American Capital Formation Foundation. The American Capital Formation Foundation does not exist. However, the American Council for Capital Formation (ACCF) does exist. The ACCF has consistently lobbied in Washington against green initiatives, especially the Kyoto protocol, claiming these actions would have severe effects on the national economy.

On its website, the ACCF[11] calls itself “one of the most influential organizations operating behind the scenes in the Washington policymaking arena.” According to ExxonSecrets[12], between 1998-2006, the American Council for Capital Formation received $1,619,523 from ExxonMobil.

Phillips final reason for opposing cap-and-trade legisilation was that it will infringe on personal freedom. For example, he said laws would be created which force people to use fluorescent light bulbs and would lower the speed limit.

Affiliations

A 2003 press release explained the relationship: “while the two organizations will share leadership and senior staff and be co-located in IWF’s new suite of offices in Washington, D.C., each will be a separate organization with its own board of directors.” According to the IWF, as of July 2005, the “IWF and AFP have had no formal relationship.”

The president of the Independent Women’s Forum, Nancy Pfotenahuer, also acted as the president of Americans for Prosperity, but that arrangement ended in July 2005, andPfotenhauer is now soley the president of IWF, and not an employee of AFP.

The Independent Women’s Forum is a conservative think tank that supports “limited government, property rights, free markets, and a powerful and effective national defense and foreign policy.” The IWF has received large amounts of funding from conservative foundations[14], especially the Scaife Family Foundations. The chair of the Independent Women’s Forum is Heather R. Higgins[15]. While Higgins has never been affiliated with the AFP, she does have connections to other conservative organizations. She is the president of the Randolph Foundation, vice-chairman of the Philanthropy Roundtable, and has been on the executive committee of the board of overseers for the Hoover Institution[16].

AFP is also a member of Internet Freedom Coalition[17] whose members include Americans for Tax Reform, Competitive Enterprise Institute, Frontiers of Freedom, Independent Women’s Forum, and the Reason Foundation.

No Stimulus Petition

In February 2009, Americans for Prosperity started a nation-wide campaign[18] to stop the senate and congress from passing President Obama’s $827 Million Stimulus Plan. The key to AFP’s campaign was a petition which stated:

“Congress should not enact an expensive spending bill under the pretense of stimulus or recovery. We cannot spend our way to prosperity, and such an expansion of the federal government will put a crushing burden on taxpayers in the long-term.”

The “No Stimulus” campaign did not prevent the bill from passing, however, AFP and its campaign were lauded by Senator James Inhofe[19] for bringing awareness to the public.